Berliner Boersenzeitung - Face-off in Britain over controversial surveillance tech

EUR -
AED 4.406854
AFN 77.997427
ALL 96.699641
AMD 450.935247
ANG 2.148026
AOA 1100.364447
ARS 1731.258254
AUD 1.715566
AWG 2.16143
AZN 2.040377
BAM 1.956813
BBD 2.397031
BDT 145.435266
BGN 2.015179
BHD 0.452423
BIF 3525.339121
BMD 1.199961
BND 1.507267
BOB 8.224291
BRL 6.221792
BSD 1.190111
BTN 109.163949
BWP 15.664172
BYN 3.391241
BYR 23519.235665
BZD 2.393629
CAD 1.632127
CDF 2687.912943
CHF 0.918474
CLF 0.026143
CLP 1032.266701
CNY 8.345309
CNH 8.326643
COP 4385.509478
CRC 591.303547
CUC 1.199961
CUP 31.798967
CVE 110.322554
CZK 24.225953
DJF 211.938799
DKK 7.467231
DOP 74.878439
DZD 155.038608
EGP 56.394324
ERN 17.999415
ETB 185.043993
FJD 2.63907
FKP 0.876141
GBP 0.869144
GEL 3.233859
GGP 0.876141
GHS 13.008787
GIP 0.876141
GMD 87.596885
GNF 10439.185447
GTQ 9.131764
GYD 248.9999
HKD 9.361514
HNL 31.408123
HRK 7.534435
HTG 156.082076
HUF 380.146451
IDR 20078.947469
ILS 3.727619
IMP 0.876141
INR 109.800572
IQD 1559.100369
IRR 50548.357454
ISK 145.195014
JEP 0.876141
JMD 186.987549
JOD 0.850807
JPY 183.338432
KES 155.071125
KGS 104.935387
KHR 4785.516479
KMF 494.383729
KPW 1079.988196
KRW 1714.972818
KWD 0.367368
KYD 0.991809
KZT 599.5878
LAK 25644.164503
LBP 106577.812016
LKR 368.51918
LRD 220.173944
LSL 19.084518
LTL 3.543173
LVL 0.725844
LYD 7.511856
MAD 10.808239
MDL 20.066217
MGA 5342.787259
MKD 61.638134
MMK 2519.977352
MNT 4278.022293
MOP 9.563409
MRU 47.546408
MUR 54.622161
MVR 18.551811
MWK 2081.932642
MXN 20.632973
MYR 4.705649
MZN 76.50917
NAD 19.084597
NGN 1680.73764
NIO 43.79595
NOK 11.523802
NPR 174.660663
NZD 1.995169
OMR 0.461379
PAB 1.190121
PEN 3.989031
PGK 5.092017
PHP 70.614698
PKR 333.214634
PLN 4.199191
PYG 7977.095064
QAR 4.326657
RON 5.097189
RSD 117.420962
RUB 91.500508
RWF 1736.405859
SAR 4.49976
SBD 9.692896
SCR 16.807959
SDG 721.789858
SEK 10.570306
SGD 1.513211
SHP 0.900282
SLE 29.158078
SLL 25162.58138
SOS 678.954201
SRD 45.954894
STD 24836.770057
STN 24.514525
SVC 10.413346
SYP 13271.058587
SZL 19.078953
THB 37.156187
TJS 11.116053
TMT 4.199864
TND 3.43179
TOP 2.889218
TRY 52.092826
TTD 8.093155
TWD 37.526984
TZS 3064.969164
UAH 51.087652
UGX 4249.216759
USD 1.199961
UYU 44.59345
UZS 14399.391968
VES 430.157401
VND 31314.182343
VUV 143.692105
WST 3.275045
XAF 656.299382
XAG 0.010437
XAU 0.000229
XCD 3.242954
XCG 2.144901
XDR 0.816226
XOF 656.29391
XPF 119.331742
YER 286.068876
ZAR 19.072361
ZMK 10801.091361
ZMW 23.499063
ZWL 386.386953
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    82.4

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.8

    +0.08%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    17.27

    +0.87%

  • NGG

    1.7300

    84.31

    +2.05%

  • RELX

    -1.1500

    38.36

    -3%

  • GSK

    0.4800

    50.8

    +0.94%

  • BTI

    1.3500

    60.34

    +2.24%

  • RIO

    2.4400

    92.91

    +2.63%

  • BP

    0.8600

    37.62

    +2.29%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    25.52

    +1.45%

  • BCC

    -1.6600

    81.74

    -2.03%

  • CMSD

    -0.0630

    24.097

    -0.26%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    13.68

    -0.37%

  • AZN

    1.3700

    95.6

    +1.43%

  • VOD

    0.2700

    14.5

    +1.86%

Face-off in Britain over controversial surveillance tech
Face-off in Britain over controversial surveillance tech / Photo: Will EDWARDS - AFP

Face-off in Britain over controversial surveillance tech

On a grey, cloudy morning in December, London police deployed a state-of-the-art AI powered camera near the railway station in the suburb of Croydon and quietly scanned the faces of the unsuspecting passersby.

Text size:

The use of live facial recognition (LFR) technology -- which creates biometric facial signatures before instantaneously running them through a watchlist of suspects -- led to 10 arrests for crimes including threats to kill, bank fraud, theft and possession of a crossbow.

The technology, which was used at the British Grand Prix in July and at King Charles III's coronation in May, has proved so effective in trials that the UK government wants it used more.

"Developing facial recognition as a crime fighting tool is a high priority," policing minister Chris Philp told police chiefs in October, adding that the technology has "great potential".

"Recent deployments have led to arrests that would otherwise have been impossible and there have been no false alerts," he added.

But the call to expedite its roll-out has outraged some parliamentarians, who want the government's privacy regulator to take "assertive, regulatory action" to prevent its abuse.

"Facial recognition surveillance involves the processing, en masse, of the sensitive biometric data of huge numbers of people -- often without their knowledge," they wrote in a letter.

"It poses a serious risk to the rights of the British public and threatens to transform our public spaces into ones in which people feel under the constant control of corporations and the government."

- False matches -

Lawmakers allege that false matches by the technology, which is yet to be debated in parliament, have led to more than 65 wrongful interventions by the police.

One was the arrest of a 14-year-old boy in school uniform, who was surrounded by officers and had his fingerprints taken before his eventual release.

MPs said the use of the technology by private companies, meanwhile, represented a "radical transfer of power" from ordinary people to companies in private spaces, with potentially serious consequences for anyone misidentified.

Members of the public, they said, could be prevented from making essential purchases like food, be subject to intrusive interventions or be brought into dangerous confrontations with security staff.

Last year the owner the Sports Direct chain, Frasers Group, defended the use of live LFR technology in stores, saying the technology had "significantly" cut shoplifting and reduced violence against staff.

- 'Walking ID cards' -

Civil liberties groups say the technology is oppressive and has no place in a democracy.

Mark Johnson, an advocacy manager for Big Brother Watch, compares the technology to the writer George Orwell's novel "Nineteen Eighty-Four" -- a portrait of a totalitarian state in which the characters are under constant surveillance.

The technology, he told AFP, "is an Orwellian mass surveillance tool that turns us all into walking ID cards".

Activists argue the technology places too much unmonitored power in the hands of the police, who have been given increased powers of arrest over protests through the Public Order Act.

The new laws, pushed through parliament by the right-wing Tory government four days before the coronation, give police the power to stop a protest if they believe it could cause "more than minor disruption to the life of the community".

Critics are especially concerned about the lack of oversight in the composition of police watchlists, saying some have been populated with protestors and people with mental health issues, who are not suspected of any offences.

"Off-the-shelf versions of these tools need legal and technical oversight to be used responsibly and ethically," one activist told AFP.

"I worry police forces don't have that resource and capacity to do this right now."

The police say that the details of anyone who is not a match on a watchlist are immediately and automatically deleted.

The Home Office interior ministry insists data protection, equality and human rights laws strictly govern the use of the technology.

But that has not satisfied opponents, in a country where previous attempts to introduce compulsory identity cards have met fierce resistance.

In June 2023, the European Parliament voted to ban live facial recognition in public spaces.

In the UK, lawmakers who oppose the technology, want to go further.

"Live facial recognition has never been given explicit approval by parliament," said Conservative MP David Davis, who once resigned his seat alleging the extension of custody time limits for terror suspects without charge was a breach of civil liberties.

"It is a suspicionless mass surveillance tool that has no place in Britain."

(K.Müller--BBZ)